WHAT WE DO

Since 1995 Cardinal Capital Management has focused on small and mid-cap value equity investing with the goal of producing high-quality investment results for investors. The experienced team of value investors uses a free cash flow driven investment strategy and team-oriented culture to deliver strong results. Cardinal is wholly owned by current and former senior investment professionals.

OUR PHILOSOPHY

The conceptual premise supporting Cardinal’s investment approach is that a company’s ability to generate excess cash flow and redeploy that cash to enhance shareholder value determines its long-term value. From a market and opportunity perspective, Cardinal believes that if there is no change, earnings are a good proxy for cash flow, and if there is good analyst coverage, the equity market is relatively efficient. However, when there is change, earnings are a poor proxy for cash flow, and if there is little analyst coverage, equity prices may not reflect underlying values.

OUR APPROACH

Cardinal employs a disciplined, bottom-up investment process. The investment team does not screen for investment candidates based upon valuation but instead generates ideas by targeting market niches where they have a structural advantage. Cardinal focuses its fundamental research efforts on businesses the team considers to be sufficiently predictable that their discounted cash flow models provide useful information. In addition, Cardinal invests with a long-term time horizon and focuses on absolute, not relative, risk of owning a company.

Distinctive Elements

Identify company’s key value drivers based on detailed business line analysis

Enables us to quantify the impact of key assumptions on our buy and sell prices

Redeployment, not just generation, of free cash flow key to analysis

Strong relationships with management result in better information and constructive input

Understand business rationale for capital allocation decisions

High absolute return target embedded in our DCF analysis

15% or 20% discount rate for all company models

Not a function of market environment

Security Selection

The investment team evaluates potential investments in two stages. In the first stage, analysts assess whether the company has an attractive business model, management is competent and motivated, the business generates significant free cash flow, and the stock price is temporarily depressed for reasons that they understand. If the portfolio managers conclude that all four conditions are present, an analyst will be selected from among the portfolio managers and senior analysts to perform the second stage, which includes in-depth due diligence. The analyst is charged with building a detailed five-year discounted cash flow model. Companies are modeled at the segment level where possible as this typically provides the most insight into financial performance. The model helps Cardinal understand the importance of critical operating and financial assumptions and is the platform for setting buy and sell prices. In evaluating investments, the team also factors in the importance and visibility of potential catalysts to avoid value traps and determine portfolio fit. Cardinal’s due diligence process is rigorous and iterative with participation from the primary analyst as well as the portfolio managers.

"Disciplined Approach to Buying and Selling"

Portfolio Construction

Cardinal builds portfolios from the bottom up. The goal is to leverage the team's stock picking abilities that result from fundamental research while remaining diversified and not being overly exposed to macroeconomic forces. Specifically, Cardinal owns 40 to 60 securities in its portfolios which meet the firm’s high annualized return targets based upon the buy and sell prices described above. The portfolio managers base individual position sizes on the predictability of the business, valuation, catalysts to unlock value and trading liquidity. Sizing positions based on these factors results in a portfolio that is conviction weighted, and, historically, about 50% of the portfolio's weighting is in the top 15 holdings.

Investment Risk Management

Each step of Cardinal’s investment process, from idea generation to portfolio management, is designed to balance expected return against the risk of losing money. The key principles are that risk mitigation does not mean return mitigation, Cardinal embeds risk mitigation in the investment process, and that risk management is a group process.

From a process perspective, Cardinal’s rigorous due diligence, idea vetting and group decision making process limit risk by controlling the quality of work and providing continuous and significant oversight. Just as Cardinal requires the economic alignment of interest of portfolio company management teams with shareholders, portfolio managers are also accountable for every position, and the firm bases compensation on client performance. Cardinal’s focus on companies which generate substantial free cash flow also mitigates risk as managements are incented and able to repurchase their stock when equity markets are weak, and stock prices are low. In addition, Cardinal’s high hurdle rate, focus on predictable businesses, and conservative forecasting, reduce the risk of and impact of forecasting errors. Continuous research ensures that the team is alert to changes in company fundamentals that could impact shareholder value.

Consistent with Cardinal’s investment discipline, the focus of the investment team is on the stocks of companies where business performance is generally less dependent on the growth rate of the U.S. economy. By attempting to limit macroeconomic risks and taking them only when the portfolio managers feel that they are adequately compensated, Cardinal believes that overall portfolio risk is reduced because tools under management’s control are generally more dependable.